AI, UK

Half a million NHS staff given AI tools to free up times for patients

By Published On: June 8, 2026Last Updated: June 8, 2026
Half a million NHS staff given AI tools to free up times for patients

More than 500,000 NHS staff are being given AI tools that could free up around two days a month for patient-facing work.

NHS England said it is significantly accelerating AI adoption across healthcare services by giving 505,000 clinicians and support staff access to Microsoft 365 Copilot.

The AI personal assistant helps clinicians draft documents and analyse data more efficiently so they can focus more time on patient care.

Rob Thompson, chief digital, data and technology officer at NHS England, said: “The NHS wants to embrace cutting-edge technology and this Microsoft partnership will mean staff can be freed from admin so they can focus more of their time on what matters most, improving care for patients.

“Innovations like this will help drive NHS productivity so patients can get the treatment they need sooner and there is better value for taxpayers.

“The potential to save NHS staff around 2 days of admin time every month could be a gamechanger for patients.

“As part of our 10 Year Health Plan, we’re making sure every pound is spent on cutting waiting times and boosting care.”

The agreement follows the largest AI trial of its kind globally in healthcare.

The trial gave more than 30,000 NHS workers across 90 NHS organisations access to Microsoft 365 Copilot.

It found that AI-powered administrative support could save an average of 43 minutes per staff member per day or more.

NHS England said this equates to five weeks of time per person each year.

Results from the trial showed that a full rollout of Microsoft 365 Copilot could save millions of hours of staff time each month.

Health innovation and safety minister Preet Kaur Gill said: “Technology should support our NHS staff, not slow them down.

“Every day, doctors, nurses and other healthcare professionals spend valuable time on administrative tasks that take them away from patients.

“By rolling out Microsoft Copilot across the NHS, we can reduce that burden, free up clinicians’ time and help staff focus on what they do best caring for patients.

“This government is putting innovation to work for patients: helping staff work more efficiently, improving productivity and supporting a modern NHS that delivers better care, faster access to treatment and better value for taxpayers.”

Copilot helps users create, analyse and get work done faster.

NHS England said the tool is expected to be used across multiple aspects of the health service.

In clinical administration, it could help clinicians draft letters and support registrar training.

Ward clerks could use the tool for patient discharge processes, service data analysis, rota building and bed management.

Medical secretaries could use it to draft patient letters, take meeting minutes and create templates for consistency.

It could also support core services such as human resources, finance and procurement.

Managers could use it to draft board papers, briefings and organisational analysis.

Each NHS trust will receive a central allocation of licences based on organisational headcount, typically starting at around 2,000 Microsoft 365 Copilot licences.

The rollout to more than 500,000 staff across the NHS is expected by October 2026.

Darren Hardman, chief executive of Microsoft UK and Ireland, said: “By rolling out Microsoft 365 Copilot at scale, NHS teams can cut through everyday admin and spend more time where it matters most.

“Bringing AI safely into the flow of healthcare will help ease pressures, improve productivity and support better decision-making across the health service.

“We’re proud to work with NHS England to help tackle some of its biggest challenges and accelerate digital transformation for the benefit of staff and patients alike.”

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